Gain the basic skills you'd need to live through a cataclysmic event-one humbling and angst-filled lesson at a time
We're inundated daily with images of chaos and catastrophe from movies, books, and the nightly news. When Sam Sheridan became a father, these tales of disaster became impossible to ignore, and he was beset with nightmares about being unable to protect his son. He soon realized, however, that each possible doomsday scenario required a different skillset, and in order to really survive the apocalypse, he'd have to learn everything, from starting a fire to stealing a car, learning to fight with a knife, and even building an igloo. With just the right mix of seriousness, paranoia, and self-deprecation, The Disaster Diaries is irresistible armchair adventure reading that informs as much as it entertains.
Gain the basic skills you'd need to live through a cataclysmic event-one humbling and angst-filled lesson at a time
We're inundated daily with images of chaos and catastrophe from movies, books, and the nightly news. When Sam Sheridan became a father, these tales of disaster became impossible to ignore, and he was beset with nightmares about being unable to protect his son. He soon realized, however, that each possible doomsday scenario required a different skillset, and in order to really survive the apocalypse, he'd have to learn everything, from starting a fire to stealing a car, learning to fight with a knife, and even building an igloo. With just the right mix of seriousness, paranoia, and self-deprecation, The Disaster Diaries is irresistible armchair adventure reading that informs as much as it entertains.
Sam Sheridan is a Harvard graduate and the author of the books, The Disaster Diaries, A Fighter’s Heart, and A Fighter’s Mind. He’s been a boxer, mixed martial arts fighter, sailor, cowboy, South Pole construction worker, and Merchant Marine. He lives in Los Angeles.
"The Disaster Diaries is a fascinating book… Reading how Sheridan
progresses through his own training further reminds me just how
much our civilization hangs by a thread and just what would be
expected of me to protect my own family."
—Wired
"Though it's a work of nonfiction, The Disaster Diaries explores
every catastrophic disaster, from floods and earthquakes to sci-fi
scenarios like zombie infections and escaping giant alien monsters,
and asks experts around the world exactly what preparations are
needed. Sheridan uncovers survival skills (first aid, hunting in
the wilderness, firing a gun) as well as some craftier tricks
(hot-wiring a car, constructing an igloo). But The Disaster Diaries
isn't instructional. The apocalypse schemes serve as a lens that
allows Sheridan to explore the limits of the human body and psyche
and how physical and mental strength are inexplicably linked... at
least when the apocalypse does arrive, I can take comfort that Sam
Sheridan will survive, to continue the existence of the human race
and smartly researched nonfiction books."
—Grantland
"Sheridan understands exactly what he is doing. He is giving
readers a fantasy ride… And clearly, he enjoys the ride himself,
savoring every moment, both physically and intellectually…
Postapocalyptic heroism, in the hands of Sam Sheridan, is just
plain fun."
—San Francisco Chronicle
"Sheridan ain't no slacker… [He] is a writer first, second and
third. Despite being a man willing to learn the intricacies of
bodybuilding and accept his role in protecting his family, it's
Sheridan's voice that sets his book apart from the usual survival
fluff… can appeal to the Everyman and the intellectual all at
once."
—Breitbart.com
"Sheridan is a charming storyteller, and his prose is both
thoughtful and playful... An upbeat and entertaining survival guide
for the end of the world."
—Kirkus (starred review)
"Although this would make a great title for a postapocalyptic
novel, Sheridan's book is actually a nonfiction guide to preparing
yourself for natural disasters and other catastrophes. The author,
a Harvard grad who's been an EMT, a merchant marine, and a
boxer—among many other adventurous endeavors—takes us step by step
through the process, beginning with the fundamentals: getting
physically fit and learning how to handle stress. From there we
move, in logical sequence, to more intricate tasks: preparing an
emergency disaster kit, learning to protect ourselves in the event
of violent encounters (hand-to-hand combat training; learning how
to fire a gun), acquiring basic medical skills, planning a strategy
to get out of the disaster area, and so on. But this is no mere
guide to surviving disaster; it's also the author's personal
account of learning to prepare for catastrophe. Sheridan doesn't
merely recommend; he shows by example, describing his own
experiences while taking the Wilderness EMT program. A clever and
very useful guide to getting ready to face the unknown."
—Booklist
"With a funky sense of humor blended with straight-faced common
sense, [Sheridan] not only addresses the long-term psychological
trauma of disaster but adds the importance of learning basic
first-aid techniques, firearms training, knife skills, hunting and
living in the wild, and expertise behind the wheel for a real world
escape and survival. As a quirky survivalist primer, Sheridan's
work spells out how to stay alive when the world goes
topsy-turvy."
—Publishers Weekly
"Sam Sheridan seems to have a tough time sleeping—and we are all
the better for it. He has taken his recurring nightmares about a
zombie apocalypse in L.A.—rendered in grippingly real,
heart-pounding scenes of narrow escape throughout—and turned them
into inspiration for a real-life end-of-the-world practical
survival guide, as he seeks out expert instruction in knife
fighting, gun battle, hot-wiring a car, making an igloo, caring for
the sick in a world without hospitals. The Disaster Diaries is the
book you want in your basement with the batteries and water, a
must-have if the world outside ever starts to look like The
Road."
—Kevin Conley, author of Stud: Adventures in Breeding and Full
Burn: On the Set, at the Bar, Behind the Wheel, and Over the Edge
with Hollywood Stuntmen
"Framed by far-out fictional vignettes like zombie infestation and
alien invasions, The Disaster Diaries traces a real-world escape
path, exploring survival skills from stunt driving a car out of
harm's way to dealing with long-term psychological trauma.
Sheridan's matter-of-fact tone is informational and gripping, and
he never descends into a paranoid, 'us or them' tone. Ultimately,
learning to live through an apocalypse is about learning to be a
human being; it takes an appetite for knowledge, the ability to
cooperate, and most of all, adaptability. Anyone who thinks
humankind is getting soft should read this book—no matter what
happens, it's clear that some of us will survive."
—Daniel Wilson, New York Times bestselling author of Amped,
Robopocalypse, and How to Survive a Robot Uprising
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